People's Voice (Bulgaria) Explained

Country:Bulgaria
People's Voice
Native Name:Глас народен
Leader:Svetoslav Vitkov
Foundation:2013
Headquarters:Gorski Patnik 1, Sofia, Bulgaria
Colours:Dark blue, Dark red
Seats1 Title:National Assembly
Seats2 Title:European Parliament
Seats3 Title:Municipalities
Website:glasnaroden.bg/

People's Voice (Bulgarian: Глас народен) is a political party in Bulgaria, founded by Svetoslav Vitkov in 2013.

History

The party was established in 2013 by popular Bulgarian punk and ska musician Svetoslav Vitkov just prior to the parliamentary election and achieved relative success by winning 1,34% of the total vote. This result placed it as the 13th largest party in the country, with just a few weeks of campaigning and little to no financial support.[1]

The party became the first one to open its list for the European Parliament election in 2014 to all people willing to participate. Following a series of events, including public debates on European policies, a lie-detector test, and Facebook voting, the party announced its 17 candidates, with most of them having never been involved in politics before. The top two candidates were well-known - Bulgarian Academy of Sciences member and activist Hristo Lafchiev, and political scientist and renowned football fan Aleksandar Alekov. The party soon became known for its provocative, fun and socially open rhetoric, including penalty shoot-outs with other politicians and scandalous video clips.

At the European Parliament elections in May 2014, People's Voice placed 9th with 1,002% of the vote.[2] In the parliamentary elections held in October 2014, the party 37,335 votes, enough to earn it 10th place with 1.14% of the vote.[3]

People's Voice attempted to enter the 2016 presidential election, initially opting for a coalition with The Greens. Their candidate for president was Svetoslav Vitkov, while his running-mate was Ivan Velkov, a Deputy Chairman of the municipal councilor in Sofia.[4] However, on October 5, 2016 their registration in the elections was denied due to an insufficient number of signatures gathered prior to the final deadline for doing so.[5]

At the 2017 parliamentary election, People's Voice entered a coalition with the Reformist Bloc, with Vitkov announced as the top candidate for the 25th electoral district, one of three that comprise the capital Sofia.[6]

The party announced that it would be contesting the 2023 parliamentary election, despite their disappointment with previous election results, justifying it by saying that a "true change" as was hoped for in the 90s is needed.[7]

Electoral history

National Assembly

ElectionLeaderVotesSeats+/–Position after the election
2013Svetoslav Vitkov47,4191.34% (#13)New
201437,3351.14% (#10) 0
2017107,4073.14% (#6) 0
Apr 20218,3300.26% (#17) 0
Jul 20214,7410.17% (#14) 0
Nov 202111,5480.43% (#13) 0
20226,1970.24% (#15) 0
20235,5600.21% (#15) 0

European Parliament

Election
  1. of seats won
  1. of total votes
% of popular voterank
201422,4401.00%9th
20196,1360.31%16th

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Резултати : Избори за народни представители 2013. Central Electoral Commission (ЦИК). Bulgarian. 20 February 2017.
  2. Web site: Резултати : Избори за Европейски Парламент 2014. Central Electoral Commission (ЦИК). Bulgarian. 20 February 2017.
  3. Web site: Резултати : Избори за народни представители 2014. Central Electoral Commission (ЦИК). Bulgarian. 20 February 2017.
  4. Web site: Светльо Витков и "Зелените" отиват заедно на президентския вот. Svetlyo Vitkov and "The Greens" are going together at the presidential vote. 14 September 2016. 20 February 2017. News.bg.
  5. Web site: Светослав Витков и Владимир Кузов отпадат от изборите, не са събрали подписи. Svetoslav Vitkov and Vladimir Kuzov drop out of the elections, they have not gathered signatures. Dnevnik.bg. 5 October 2016. 20 February 2017. Bulgarian.
  6. Web site: "Глас народен" се коалира с Реформаторския блок, Витков ще води в София. "People's Voice" forms a coalition with the Reformist Bloc, Vitkov to lead in Sofia. Dnevnik.bg. 17 February 2017. 20 February 2017. Bulgarian.
  7. Web site: Светльо Витков: Човешката любов е повратлива. Обичат те за "Хиподил", но те мразят за политиката . nova.bg. 5 March 2023. 7 March 2023. Bulgarian.